Topic: I'm glad I'm not a shuttle crew member  (Read 729 times)

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Offline Jack Morris

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I'm glad I'm not a shuttle crew member
« on: July 04, 2006, 02:04:12 pm »
They will do anything for kudo points, even to the objections of the safety officers. Hope ya come back home safely.

Space shuttle Discovery goes into orbit By MARCIA DUNN, AP Aerospace Writer
7 minutes ago
 


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - In a majestic Independence Day liftoff, Discovery and its crew of seven blasted into orbit Tuesday on the first space shuttle launch in a year, flying over objections from those within        NASA who argued for more fuel-tank repairs.

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NASA's first-ever Fourth of July launch came after two weather delays and last-minute foam trouble that conjured up worries that have dogged NASA since Columbia was brought down by a chunk of fuel tank insulation foam 3 1/2 years ago.

The foam problem resurfaced during last July's flight of Discovery and again Monday, keeping the space agency debating safety all the way up to the eve of liftoff.

As Discovery thundered away from its seaside pad at 2:38 p.m. and into space Tuesday, video showed was no initial sign of significant foam loss. Engineers will spend the next few days poring over the video before the shuttle returns to Earth.

Commander Steven Lindsey, an Air Force fighter pilot, was at Discovery's controls and aiming for a Thursday linkup with the international space station.

"Discovery's ready, the weather's beautiful, America is ready to return the space shuttle to flight. So good luck and Godspeed, Discovery," launch director Mike Leinbach said just before liftoff.

"I can't think of a better place to be here on the Fourth of July," radioed Lindsey. "For all the folks on the Florida east coast, we hope to very soon get you an up-close and personal look at the rocket's red glare."

It was unclear for a while Monday whether Discovery would fly.

A slice of foam, no bigger than a crust of bread, fell off an expansion joint on Discovery's external fuel tank following Sunday's delay. Shuttle managers concluded Monday night after intensive engineering analysis that the remaining foam on that part of the tank was solid.

Engineers said the piece — 3 inches long and just one-tenth of an ounce — was too small to pose a threat even if it had come off during launch and smacked the shuttle. Inspectors devised a long pole with a camera on the end to get an up-close look at the joint where the foam came off, and found no evidence of further damage. NASA made sure there was no excessive ice buildup at that spot Tuesday; ice could be even more damaging than foam at liftoff.

"You could mail 10 of these things with the cost of a single first-class stamp," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said earlier on NBC's "Today." We're talking about a very, very minor piece of foam here. ... This is not an issue."

The fallen foam, albeit harmless, added to the tension already surrounding this mission.

NASA's chief engineer and top-ranking safety official objected two weeks ago to launching Discovery on the 12-day station delivery mission, without first eliminating the lingering dangers from foam loss, considered probable and potentially catastrophic.

They were overruled by shuttle managers and, ultimately, by Griffin. He stressed the need to get on with building the half-done, long-overdue space station before the shuttles are retired in 2010 to make way for a moonship, per        President Bush's orders.

Griffin said he welcomed the debate over Discovery's launch and acknowledged that the space agency plays the odds with every shuttle liftoff.

"If foam hits the orbiter and doesn't damage it, I'm going to say ho-hum because I know we're going to release foam. The goal is to make sure that the foam is of a small enough size that I know we're not going to hurt anything," Griffin said in a weekend interview with The Associated Press.

He added: "It's hardly the only thing that poses a risk to a space shuttle mission."

If photos during launch or the flight show serious damage to Discovery, the crew could move into the space station. Then a risky shuttle rescue — fraught with its own problems — would have to be mounted. The rescue ship, Atlantis, would face the same potential foam threat at launch.

Many have speculated that if anything happens to Discovery or its five-man, two-woman crew, the shuttle program may well end with this mission. And President Bush's plans for moon and Mars exploration could be put in jeopardy.

The unprecedented controversy of flying foam put a cloud over NASA's second attempt since Columbia to get the shuttle program back on track. In its flight last July, Discovery also experienced dangerous foam loss. But the foam chunk was smaller than the one that slammed into Columbia's left wing, and it missed Discovery altogether.

Just like a year ago, more than 100 cameras and radar were trained on Discovery at liftoff to spot any foam coming off the fuel tank and impacting the shuttle. The intensive picture-taking continued with on-board cameras during the entire eight-minute climb to space, with the astronauts snapping zoom-in shots of the tank immediately upon reaching orbit.

NASA figures it will be nearly a week before it can decisively say whether Discovery was hit and damaged by foam during launch. And it will be a week-and-a-half before engineers can conclude whether any pieces of space junk struck the shuttle in orbit and caused irreparable damage.

Last July, the suite of cameras caught a 1-pound slice of foam falling off Discovery's fuel tank two minutes after liftoff, despite extensive repairs and analyses following the Columbia disaster. The big piece of foam came off an area untouched in the wake of the tragedy. Smaller pieces popped off other parts of the 154-foot tank.

Over the past year, NASA removed the foam from the location of last year's largest foam loss, saying it represented the biggest aerodynamic change to the shuttle in 25 years of flight. Engineers deemed the foam there unnecessary.

Shuttle managers put off repairs to another potentially dangerous area of the tank, foam wedges to insulate the metal brackets that hold pressurized lines in place. The foam prevents ice and frost from forming on the brackets once the tank is filled with supercold fuel.

Managers said they wanted to make one major change at a time. The space agency's chief engineer disagreed as did the chief safety officer, saying they would rather take the extra six months to fix the problem before launching.

Adding to the appearance of conflict, NASA is refusing to publicly release the documents of those flight readiness meetings as it did a year ago, saying it would prevent employees from speaking frankly in the future.

Griffin contends NASA doesn't have time to spare given that the three remaining shuttles are scheduled to be phased out in 2010 and replaced by a new spaceship intended to return astronauts to the moon in the next decade.

Riding aboard Discovery is German astronaut Thomas Reiter, who will move into the space station for a half-year stay. He carried a small German flag out to the launch pad.

Two astronauts, an American and a Russian, are already living on the station; Reiter will expand the size of the station crew to three for the first time since 2003. Staffing was scaled back in the wake of the Columbia disaster because of the lack of shuttle supply flights.

Besides Lindsey and Reiter, Discovery is carrying pilot Mark Kelly; Michael Fossum and Piers Sellers, who will conduct at least two spacewalks at the station; and Lisa Nowak and Stephanie Wilson.

Tuesday's guest list was smaller than for the previous two launch tries. Some family members of the perished Columbia astronauts remained for the liftoff.

Beginning Wednesday, Discovery's astronauts will survey the shuttle beginning for any damage from foam, ice or other debris, using a 50-foot inspection boom that will be attached to the ship's 50-foot robot arm, and test the stability of the boom by putting a spacewalker on the end of it. They also will make repairs to the space station and deliver much-needed supplies.